Potential effects on groundwater quality associated with infiltrating stormwater through dry wells for aquifer recharge.

J Contam Hydrol

Office of Environmental Health Hazard Assessment, Cal EPA, Sacramento, CA, United States of America.

Published: April 2022

Dry wells (gravity-fed infiltration wells) have frequently been used to recharge aquifers with stormwater, especially in urban areas, as well as manage flood risk and reduce surface water body contamination from stormwater pollutants. However, only limited assessment of their potential adverse impacts on groundwater quality exists. Dry well recharge can bypass significant portions of the filtering-capacity of the vadose zone. Stormwater and groundwater monitoring data and analysis of transport of a wide range of historic and current-use stormwater chemicals of concern is lacking. To address these gaps, two dry wells were constructed with vegetated and structural pretreatment features to assess the likelihood of stormwater contaminants reaching the aquifer. We monitored, assessed, and compared the presence of contaminants in stormwater to water quality in the vadose zone and shallow groundwater after it passed through the dry well. The dry wells were installed at a suburban residential and at a suburban commercial site. The selected sites were overlying a regional, unconsolidated, and highly heterogeneous alluvial aquifer system. Stormwater, vadose zone, and groundwater samples were collected during five storms and analyzed for over 200 contaminants of concern. Relatively few contaminants were detected in stormwater, generally at low concentrations. Prior to stormwater entering the dry well, 50-65% of contaminants were removed by vegetated pretreatment. In groundwater, metals such as aluminum and iron were detected at similar concentrations in both upgradient and downgradient wells, suggesting the source of these metals was not dry well effluent. Naturally occurring metals such as chromium and arsenic were not detected in stormwater but were found at elevated concentrations in groundwater. A modeling assessment suggests that the travel time of metals and hydrophobic organic contaminants to the water table at these sites ranges from years to centuries, whereas water soluble pesticides would likely reach the water table within days to months. The modeling assessment also showed that more vulnerable sites with higher fraction of alluvial sands would have much shorter contaminant travel times. However, none of the contaminants assessed reached concentrations that pose a risk to human health across the scenarios considered. No evidence was found, either through direct measurements or vadose zone modeling, that contaminants present in suburban stormwater degraded or would degrade groundwater quality at the studied sites and site conditions. Future work is needed to address emerging contaminants of concern.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jconhyd.2022.103964DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

dry wells
16
dry well
16
vadose zone
16
groundwater quality
12
stormwater
12
contaminants
9
groundwater
8
dry
8
contaminants concern
8
detected stormwater
8

Similar Publications

Objective: To evaluate the drinking water quality in cities and towns in Xinjiang.

Methods: The testing data of 6543 water samples from the dry season and the wet season in 2023 were selected, and the drinking water quality in Xinjiang was evaluated and analyzed by using the Nemerow pollution index, the worst factor discriminant method and the weighted average method to calculate the comprehensive water quality index.

Results: The comprehensive index of drinking water quality in Xinjiang was 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

This study explores the development and characterization of spray-dried composite microparticles consisting of levofloxacin (LVX, a broad-spectrum antibiotic), and ambroxol (AMB, a mucolytic agent that has antibacterial and antibiofilm properties), for the intended application of the drug against lower respiratory tract infections (LRTIs). A range of LVX to AMB mass ratios (1:1, 1:0.5, and 1:0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Aims: To investigate the effect of injection of trace mineral supplement (TMS) 14-28 days before calving on white blood cell count (WBCC) and function, serum antioxidant capacity (SAC) and reactive oxygen species (ROS) in pasture-fed cattle after calving.

Methods: On each of two South Island, seasonally calving, pastoral dairy farms,1 month before dry-off, a random sample of 150 multiparous cows predicted to calve within 7 days of the herd's planned start of calving (PSC) were stratified on individual somatic cell count, age, breed and expected calving date. On each farm, 14-24 days before PSC, 60 selected cows were randomly assigned for TMS (Zn, Mn, Se, Cu) injection, and 60 were controls.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Controls on regional sulphate distribution in shallow groundwater in the western Canadian Interior Plains.

Sci Total Environ

December 2024

Department of Earth, Energy and Environment, University of Calgary, 2500 University Dr NW, Calgary, AB T2N 1N4, Canada.

Sulphate (SO), predominantly derived from sulphur (S)-bearing glacial sediments distributed widely across the Canadian Interior Plains, contributes to high groundwater salinity and can be detrimental to riparian and dry-land ecosystems, agricultural production, and water use. While previous researchers investigated SO distribution and dynamics in shallow groundwater at local scales (<1500 km), we examine SO occurrence in groundwater at larger scales, and to depths of ∼150 m, considering variations in geology, glacial history, climate, and geochemical and hydrogeological settings in the Canadian province of Alberta. Sulphate concentrations in groundwater vary considerably, with 15 % of 139,130 samples above the 500 mg/L Canadian drinking water aesthetic objective.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: World Health Organization (WHO) has reported 249 million cases infected by malaria worldwide and 608 thousands deaths in 2022. Investigations for new antimalarial drugs from traditional medicine have proven to be more effective and less expensive. The medicinal plants that have been used for treatment of malaria, generally known as types of fevers in traditional medicine, can be suitable candidates for evaluating antimalarial effects.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!